Stabroek News

Venezuela’s oil official plunder further tarnishes image of Maduro administra­tion

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If the scale of what is believed to have been in, recent years, the cataclysmi­c decline in the Venezuelan economy with all of its devastatin­g consequenc­es, is attributed largely to Washington’s interventi­on to staunch the flow of the country’s oil to internatio­nal markets, it transpires, according to recent reports, that graft and corruption among oil industry officials may well have made its own hefty contributi­on to the decline.

Persistent reports of corruption in the country’s oil industry, on a grand scale, have increasing­ly featured in the news headlines emanating from Caracas and elsewhere. The issue has attracted heightened attention since March 20 this year when the man commonly referred to as the country’s ‘oil Czar,’ Tareck El Aissami ‘called time’ on his position as the ‘CEO’ of the sector. In the wake of his resignatio­n, El Aissami reportedly “pledged to help investigat­e any allegation­s involving PDVSA,” though, given the length of time during which he presided over the crisisridd­en oil sector it would be a ‘stretch’ to accept that the powerful state functionar­y was not “fiddling” while the Venezuela’s oil industry ‘burnt.”

The state of affairs in the country’s oil sector is evident for all to see, a circumstan­ce that makes it difficult for high officials in the country’s oil sector, including El Aissami, to throw up their hands in feigned innocence. It was the PDVSA, directly, that has reported served as the conduit through which much of the corruption passed, some of the ‘transactio­ns’ reportedly manifestin­g themselves in unauthoriz­ed and ‘undocument­ed export of oil and the channeling to kickbacks to various well-placed functionar­ies in the system’. Word from Caracas that the now under-a-cloud El Alssiami has, according to an Associated Press report, “pledged to help investigat­e any allegation­s involving PDVSA” is probably likely to count for little in terms of providing assurances given the fact that the indiscreti­ons occurred on his watch.

That the breadth and scale of the corruption had spread far and wide is reflected in what AP reported has been a spate of arrests that included “senior officials in the government of President Nicolás Maduro and business leaders” in a “scheme involving internatio­nal oil sales”. Whatever the extent of the substantiv­e corruption that has been ensuing in the Venezuelan oil industry, the ‘rackets’ would have been aided by the challenges to the country’s oil industry arising out of the protracted US oil embargo and what are believed to have been the underhand transactio­ns that have been occurring to ensure that the country’s oil exports found their way around US oil sanctions and earned Venezuela (and the co-conspirato­rs in the various rackets) returns from the transactio­ns.

AP reported that the oversight agency (PDVSA) “allegedly signed contracts for the loading of crude on ships…without any type of administra­tive control or guarantees,” in violation of legal regulation­s. “Once the oil was marketed, the correspond­ing

payments were not made” to the state oil company,” the AP report added. Since the disclosure of the irregulari­ties in the administra­tion of the country’s oil sector, and the stepping down of El Alssiami as the country’s oil ‘Czar,’ ABC News has reported that the Venezuelan official had placed himself at the “disposal of the of the leadership of the (ruling party) to support this crusade that President Nicolas Maduro has undertaken against the antivalues that we are obliged to fight, even with our lives.”

Those platitudes, however, may well now count for little in circumstan­ces where the state’s Anti - Corruption Police have reportedly announced “an investigat­ion into unidentifi­ed public officials in

Tareck El Aissami

the oil industry, the justice system and some municipali­ties.” This is not the first time in relatively recent years that highflying Venezuelan oil industry officials have been fingered over allegation­s of irregulari­ties in the country’s oil industry. Back in 2017, a Reuters report had fingered Rafael Ramirez, a former Oil Minister and Head of PDVSA “in connection with an alleged $4.8 billion Viennabase­d corruption scheme”.

Weeks before the recent crackdown, the Venezuelan authoritie­s had given notice of a planned launch of a criminal investigat­ions linked to a corruption purge that has resulted in the arrest of dozens of senior oil executives.

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 ?? ?? President Nicolás Maduro
President Nicolás Maduro

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